Join the Pennsylvania Equine Rescue & Retirement Foundation (PERRF) on March 3rd for a fun-filled evening of horse racing fun that includes dinner, drinks, music, Chinese auction, 50/50 auction, and gift baskets—all to support our rescue efforts for horses and equine-centered programs.

Only 150 tickets will be sold! The purchase of each ticket includes: dinner, dessert, sodas, and (1) Name Your Horse (additional horses $10 each). BYOB!

TICKETS - Only 150 tickets will be sold:

$20 - Singles

$35 - Couples

$150 - Reserved Table for 8

WHERE: Center Township Fire Department, Social Hall

3385 Brodhead Rd, Aliquippa, PA 15001

DOORS OPEN: 5:30 PM, DINNER 6:00 PM, RACES 7:00 PM

PERRF is looking for Sponsors, Volunteers and items for the Chinese auction. Thank you!

$20 Single TicketUSD 20.00

$20 Single Ticket

$35 Couples TicketUSD 35.00

$35 Couples Ticket

$150 Table for EightUSD 150.00

$150 Table for Eight

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If you would like to you contribute to the PERRF's rescue efforts, please consider making a tax-deductible donation!

While many of our rescue horses have cruelty tales of their own, it was Cordelia’s story that is perhaps the most well-known because her story is connected to the story of Penn and Penny's rescue and new legislation that protects animals.

Cordelia was kept in a Bedford County junkyard and slowly starved to near death before the owner agreed to allow a rescue to take her. Sadly, even with rescue efforts and medical attention, Cordelia died within a matter of days. Her story provoked outrage from people all over the globe who offered well wishes via social media during her rescue and medical care.

Cordelia's story also prompted lawmakers to call for making systemic changes to the PA’s animal cruelty laws.

Soon after Cordelia's death, three more horses came to the attention of Governor Wolf, PA lawmakers, and the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). By the time these horses were released for rescue, one of the horses had died, but the other two horses, Penn and Penny, were rescued by PERRF.

Penn and Penny are now healthy and living out their retirement at PERRF and even have "jobs" as mascots for Pennsylvania’s anti-cruelty laws introduced by Senators Eichelberger, Stephenson, and Bizzarro. This new legislation was one of four anti-cruelty measures included in the Act 10 Law, which adds equines to the animal protection law and adds starvation to the list of abuses. This law also provides the legal basis for criminal charges.

So while two horses in this story did not survive the horrific abuse and neglect they were subjected to, Penn and Penny not only survived, but are now safe, happy, and healthy, and helped lead the way to the new legislation that protects the welfare of horses in Pennsylvania.

"There is something about the outside of a horse that is good for the

inside of a man." ~Winston Churchill

“God forbid that I should go to any heaven in which there are no horses."

~R.B. Cunninghame Graham

"You know horses are smarter than people. You never heard of a horse

going broke betting on people." ~Will Rogers

“Old minds are like old horses; you must exercise them if you wish to

keep them in working order." ~John Adams

"A horse never runs so fast as when he has other horses

to catch up and outpace." ~Ovid

''There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.”

~Robert Smith Surtees

"We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals."

~Immanuel Kant

“The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated."